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Custom Law Project- Think Tank Piece
Not for General Circulation without the permission of the author
SEEING LAW IN PRE-EUROPEAN MAORI SOCIETY.
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Wayne Rumbles
Note: Metge makes a distinction between large scale complex societies which tend to
use formal measures to maintain order such as law making bodies and laws codified into
a system, courts and judges, and small scale societies with simpler political systems
which tend to use mainly informal, implicit measure that serve multiple social functions.
I will use this distinction in this paper.
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Seeing law
In many large-scale complex societies law is maintained and promulgated through
specialised institutions, this law is solidified into a written form, however a clear and
codified set of laws is rare and specialised in human societies. Legal principles are more
often implicit, flexible, and constantly changing. Many small-scale stateless societies
lacked specialised judicial institutions to pass and enforce judgements, and disputes were
resolved mainly by the contending parties themselves.
The general underlying scheme regulating the application of sanctions to wrongdoers is not law
in the Austinian sense [commands from a central sovereign source of power] but collective
retaliation. Punishments, by necessity, vary with kinship backing and support musterable by the
respective parties involved.1
While a universal definition of law is difficult to give because in small-scale stateless
societies there is a continuity of law and everyday life, in these societies often law serves
to preserve and rebuild networks of social relations, this enables us to understand why:
[p]rocesses which occur within the legal frame-work do not always concern the actual settlements
of disputes. This may provide the context for the public enactment of established relations.2
Because legal action and social action are tightly intertwined within small-scale stateless
societies, sometimes legal process as a social activity, is more important than the actual
outcome. It is when customs are codified and frozen, that they lose their ability to adapt
1Marshall Sahlins, Social Stratification in Polynesia, (1958). 150. For further discussion of Austinian
Sovereignty see Roger Cotterrell, The politics of Jurisprudence, (1989).
Thomas Hobbes,Leviathan, (1914).
John Austin, The Province of Jurisprudence Determined, (1955).2
J Comaroff and S Roberrts,Long-Term Field Research in Social Anthropology, (1977). 80.
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flexibly to situations of change. Legal action becomes simplified and loses its complex
extra-legal social functions.3
Adamson Hoebel sees law in terms of social control that is:
[a] social norm is legal if its neglect or infraction is regularly met, in threat or in fact, by the
application of physical force by an individual or group possessing the socially recognized
privilege of so acting.4
On this basis Polynesian techniques of social control can be termed law, Ward notes that
nineteen-century Maori leaders, reflecting on their society in discussions with Europeans
often referred to our Law rather than our Custom.5
This reinforces that failure to
recognise law in pre-European or contact Maori society by many observers was a defect
in the way of observation rather than any actual absence of law.6 In other words they
could not see law because they could not see their own law reflected back at them.
A legal system will contain both formal and informal mechanisms of dispute resolution,
in a society without formal courts or a state structure these can be varied and likely to be
based on negotiation or confrontation. Legal system are not just about dealing with
criminal offences, property and personal rights and dealing with disputes. A legal system
3Roger Keesing and Andrew Strathern, Cultural Anthropology: A Contemporary Perspective, (3rd edition
ed, 1998 (1981)).4
Adamson Hoebel, The Law of Primitive Man, (1967). 28.5
Alan Ward,A Show of Justice, (1995). 4.6
Of course this defect in seeing is in a great part due to the observers historical and social positioning,
they were looking for recognisable social forms that were not present in the societies in which they
encountered.
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is also about creating and preserving an ordered system of mutual expectation and
understandings that are intended to avoid conflict.7
In small-scale societies legal processes and legal principles can come to light by looking
at cases, at specific instances where conflicts of rights or breaches of rules are socially
resolved.8
It is from these cases that the legal principles or norms of a society will
emerge.
In order to elaborate the legal principles of pre-European contact Maori society, we need
to ask the following questions:
Who makes legal decisions? In what settings and by what processes? What guidelines,
principles, or precedents are used to make them? How are they enforced?9
7Roger Keesing and Andrew Strathern, Cultural Anthropology: A Contemporary Perspective, (3rd edition
ed, 1998 (1981)). 297-98
Also see I Hammnett, (ed)Anthropology and the Law (1977). 5.
In the western legal system
In civil matters, litigation occurs in only a very small proportion of deputes, and these in their turn are
almost infinitesimally few in comparison with the huge number f interactions where law serves merely as a
consensual and implicit context of transactional discourse. Indeed , what the law principally offers is the
crucial advantage of knowing more or less where they and their partners stand. (298)8Roger Keesing and Andrew Strathern, Cultural Anthropology: A Contemporary Perspective, (3rd edition
ed, 1998 (1981)). 293.9
Roger Keesing and Andrew Strathern, Cultural Anthropology: A Contemporary Perspective, (3rd edition
ed, 1998 (1981)).
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What is Custom Law?
Durie defines custom law as law generated by social precedent and acceptance as
distinct from institutional law generated from organisation of a superordinate
authority.10
It is interesting to note that before the rise of legal positivism, common law was seen as
customary law:
the custom or practice of the English which the Judges discovered, or enunciated, or clarified,
but which they did not create, ( it was already there, as it were).11
It is a mistake to see custom law in small-scale societies as a rigid system that is obeyed
without question, which is fixed and unchanging. Every society works out its own
balance of choice and constraint, where there is choice there is the potential for change. 12
It is generally accepted (at least in anthropological circles) that all human societies have
law consisting of legal principles and legal processes, whether or not they have codified
laws and law courts.13
Metge argues that all societies pursue that maintenance of order
except in times of exceptional crisis. This maintenance of order includes the
reinforcement of accepted values and the punishment of breaches. All societies, equally
depend on the maintenance of social norms, which may be sanctioned explicitly or
implicitly.
10Eddie Durie, Custom Law, (1994). 4.
11Richard Boast et al.,Mari Land Law, (1999). 8.
12Joan Metge, Commentary on Judge Durie's Custom Law, (1995) . 2.
13Roger Keesing and Andrew Strathern, Cultural Anthropology: A Contemporary Perspective, (3rd edition
ed, 1998 (1981)). 288-301.
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Early observers of small-scale societies held that the individual had no real freedom of
choice, that their every action was circumscribed by the iron mould of custom, reinforced
by fears of the supernatural.14
However this says more about the observers than the
societies that they were describing. Malinowski found in the societies which he described
that this rigid circumscription was lacking, and that people acted with considerable
freedom of choice, without the oppressive everpresent fear of supernatural sanction.15
While there were culturally patterned ways of breaking norms,
16
and in Maori society
powerful people sometimes-broke rules to prove that they were toa strong men,
possessed of great mana.17
Licence was restricted and community cohesiveness
maintained by the principle of reciprocity. That there was a sense of the interdependence,
for the basic needs of life, among its members, which acted as a constraint on anti-social
behaviour. Customary norms regulated social and economic life. Many of these were
secular, involving the actions of people, not gods and spirits, (at least not directly); and
they were flexible and subject to reinterpretation according to circumstances.18
It is sometimes argued that Maori customary law is enforceable in the New Zealand
courts only where it has been incorporated in statute.19
However Boast makes a case that
14Alan Ward,A Show of Justice, (1995). 3.
15Alan Ward, A Show of Justice, (1995). 3-4 Bronislaw Malinowski, Crime and custom in savage society,
(1926) and Bronislaw Malinowski, Magic, science, and religion, and other essays, (1974).16
Roger Keesing and Andrew Strathern, Cultural Anthropology: A Contemporary Perspective, (3rd edition
ed, 1998 (1981)). 301.17
Alan Ward,A Show of Justice, (1995). 7.18
Alan Ward,A Show of Justice, (1995). 4.19
Paul McHugh,Maori Magna Carta, (1991). 95.
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Maori customary law does form part of the corpus of New Zealand common law and may
be taken into account in the ordinary courts. He cites a line of cases20 that culminate with
the ruling of Chilwell J, that:
[Maori] customs and practices which include spiritual elements are cognisable in a Court of law
provided they are properly established , usually by evidence.21
He cites the Coopers Js three-part test for the establishment of a rule of customary law,
a) whether the custom existed as a general custom for the class of people; [Maori
perhaps this could be narrowed to iwi or hapu?? There would be perhaps policy
reasons for resistance to any narrowing of the criteria]
b) whether the custom was contrary to statute; [statute always overrides custom
in an Austinian type legal system]
c) whether the custom was reasonable taking in all the circumstances.22
Although Boast admits that the recognition of Maori custom law is very limited and
constricting, it nevertheless shows that Maori customary law is cognisable and
enforceable in the New Zealand courts. Much of Maori customary law is supplanted by
statute and even in areas such as the RMA or the TTWMA, there is little scope of
applying Maori Customary law except as it is formally recognised. Any more substantial
recognition of Maori Customary law could (at present) only be brought about by
parliament. However this does show that even in the present system Maori customary law
20See Richard Boast et al.,Mari Land Law, (1999). 15-19
These cases include:
Rira Peti v Ngaraihi Te Paku (1888) 7 NZ Jur (NS) 72, 77
Nireaha Tamaki v Baker[1901] AC 5671 (PC), (1`901) NZPCC 371, 382.
Hineiti Rirerire Arani v Public Trust (1919) {1840-1932] NZPCC 1 (PC)21
Huakina Development trust v Waikato Valley Authority[1987] 2NZLR 188 at 215
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is a live issue and without too drastic an overhaul of present laws and institutions Maori
customary law could play a more significant part.
What is Maori Custom Law
Maori custom law evolved in a particular socio-political order where the largest and the
most important socio-political groupings were relatively limited in size, were based on
kinship, preserved and transmitted knowledge orally, and were relatively mobile both in
space and time. This meant that the application of legal principles and processes was able
to be contextualised tailoring them to particular circumstances.
The main functioning political and economic unit was a hapu or cluster of hapu recognising the
mana of a senior chief. Hapu and the larger aggregation called iwi, were named from founding
ancestors, possibly mythical and themselves descended from those who created and still acted in
the world order.23
Pre-contact Maori society offered a large degree of choice to its members. The high value
placed on oratory is evidence of the important of debate in decision making and the need
for the rangatira to constantly mobilise support for their leadership.
Although it is tempting to look for a direct relationship between Maori and western legal
concepts, Metge points out that Maori concepts hardly ever correspond exactly to those
of the West which they may appear to resemble on the surface. While there is a degree of
22Public Trustee v Loasby (1908) 27 NZLR 801.
23Alan Ward,A Show of Justice, (1995). 5
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overlap there are usually divergences as well. Even if the denotation -- the direct
reference is substantially the same, the connotations are significantly different.24
The belief that the spiritual order constantly interacted with the material order extended to the
view that sickness and death were caused by the withdrawal of protection or the malignancy, of
spirit beings. This could be due some failure in action or ritual of the afflicted person or his kin,
but was frequently held to be the result of sorcery by some adversary, and this too was a cause of
conflict.25
Ward explains that this results in there being a number of actions that were seen as
offences to Maori which were not recognised as such in the English law of the nineteenth
century. However given this caveat Ward does identify areas of correspondence between
Maori concepts of wrong and those recognised in English law. Such as negligence
leading to damage of the person or property was punishable, so were nuisance, trespass,
defamation, liability for animal trespass, seduction and other offences that are categorised
as torts in England.
Tikanga
Both Durie and Metge identify tikanga as central importance in the context of custom
law. Tikanga is said to describe the norms that maintained law and order in Maori
customary society.26
Metge describes tikanga as having a range of meanings in Maoridom, she believes that
the primary emphasis is on rightness.27
When used in the phrase nga tikanga Maori it
24Joan Metge, Commentary on Judge Durie's Custom Law, (1995) . Part1, 2.
25Alan Ward,A Show of Justice, (1995). 8.
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means the right Maori ways and refers to rules and guidelines for living generally
accepted as tika. This includes ways of thinking (whakaaro nui) and ways of doing
(mahinga), principles and practice.
Nga tikanga Maori were handed down from tupuna, but this did not mean that they were
static or entrenched.28
Nga tikanga are believed to originate in the spiritual realm with the
gods/god and are endorsed and sanctioned in this world by the community as a whole. (cf
this with the idea that the common law always existed29)
Tangata whenua of a particular locality had the right to formulate their own tikanga, thus
while the principles were the same throughout Maoridom the detailed content may vary
between iwi, hapu and even whanau.30
Nga tikanga Maori fulfil other functions besides maintaining rule of law, and covers the
whole range of human behaviours, including moral and spiritual aspects, and are enforced
by other means. 31
Tikanga arises out of an on-going community debate and practice and are communicated orally; as
a result they are adapted to changing circumstances easily, quickly and without most people being
consciously aware of the shift.32
26Eddie Durie, Custom Law, (1994).
27Joan Metge, Commentary on Judge Durie's Custom Law, (1995) . 4.
28Joan Metge,New Growth from Old, (1995). 21.
29Richard Boast et al.,Mari Land Law, (1999). 12.
30Joan Metge,New Growth from Old, (1995). 21.
31Joan Metge,New Growth from Old, (1995). 21.
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While tikanga are not formally promulgated or published in a codified form, Maori do
express them in words from time to time. This is usually done in a context in which the
tikanga is to be used. They may be phrased as prescriptions or descriptions, these can be
in the form proverbs, stories or other narratives. Tikanga have varying levels of
generality form the highly general to the specific, Metge identifies three levels but admits
that this classification is artificial and not particularly Maori. The higher the level of
generality the easier it is to observe the value behind the tikanga however the more
specialised or specific the harder it is to see that they are value based , or which value is
being served.
33
It would seem that in order to seek the underlying values of Maori
customary law one should look for the general tikanga of an area of focus, however
localised example will help illustrate those principles.
She suggests that the most knowledgeable kaumatua would draw on a store of tikanga
and draw on them when deciding how to act in a particular situation. In each situation
they review past precedents and present needs, and on that basis they decide which
tikanga are most relevant and should take precedent in that context. 34
Who had the Authority?
Law and political power are part of the same continuum, when looking at small-scale
societies it is not useful to try and separate the two. However in general the class that
holds power in a society has the means to define laws that legitimise its owns rights and
32Joan Metge,New Growth from Old, (1995). 5.
33Joan Metge,New Growth from Old, (1995). 6-8.
34Joan Metge,New Growth from Old, (1995). 8
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vested interests, and protect and perpetrate them. It is not so much that might makes right
as that power conveys the means to define what is legitimate.35
Leadership in Maori Society devolved on chiefs, rank and status normally being ascribed
to those in the most direct lines of descent from the ancestor-gods and therefore inheritors
of spiritual potency, or mana, and knowledge of the rituals to make it effective for the
well being of their kin. However the chiefly principle was also flexible: the possession of
mana was deemed to be revealed through efficiency in leadership, both in the peaceful
arts: cultivation; fishing; hunting and in war. Despite seniority of decent, ineffective men
could be considered as lacking mana and effective chieftainship could pass to a younger
brother or near kinsman who proved more resourceful, although the senior decent might
still be called upon to recite the rituals associated with the cycle of cultivation. If there
was a change in leadership genealogies were manipulated to make a claimant to high rank
appear close to the senior lines of ancestry.36
The senior chiefs could not stand back and give orders, although their lead or opinion was
often accepted, the rangatira (the active heads of each family) and the kaumatua also had
considerable authority in their own right. Chiefs were dependent for economic and
military strength upon reciprocal services of their kinsmen, and therefore could not take
35Roger Keesing and Andrew Strathern, Cultural Anthropology: A Contemporary Perspective, (3rd edition
ed, 1998 (1981)). 294.36
Alan Ward,A Show of Justice, (1995). 5.
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independent decisions or persistently flout public opinion without the risk of
repudiation.37
While a chiefs authority over rangatira was limited, it was nevertheless important. Under
traditional religion a high ranking and powerful chief, a person of great mana, was
charged with powers that made contact with him or his artefacts extremely precarious for
ordinary men: he was tapu. The Mana and tapu principles were the source of both order
and dispute in Maori society. Kinship orientation and community routine of cultivating,
hunting and fighting were focussed upon them.
A chief was the recipient of wealth through gifts from his kin, and he distributed that
wealth in feasts on important occasions. A chiefs power was a source of control which
could be used to tapu property or person, to make a crop safe from trespass, to set aside a
tree for canoe building or to conserve a stretch of forest or shell fish ground for an
important feast. The burial places of chiefs were highly tapu . These prohibitions were
generally well known to the members of the community whose chiefs created them, and
would not normally be violated for fear of sickness or catastrophe which would follow as
a result of the anger of the spirits and ancestor dead. But strangers could unwittingly
infringe tapu and the community whose sacred places were violated would be impelled to
37Alan Ward,A Show of Justice, (1995).6. See also Eddie Durie, Custom Law, (1994). 36.
The absence of permanent state-like institutions meant there was a high adaptability in rule
formation but a tendency to atomise, or for groups to fractionate when disputes could not be
settled. It meant adjustable group definitions, re-definitions of standards (rules were made to suit
cases), complex exchange relationships for the maintenance of peace and a change in expectations
during war. The power and authority of the people, the kaumatua and the rangatira at any place
and time, must be assessed in terms of the relationships and circumstances then pertaining
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exact compensation from or even kill the intruder, least their own ancestor-dead take
retribution on them for the unrequited affront. Moreover possessors of mana were
impelled to demonstrate it, by boldness and by constant concern for their names and
stations. This made chiefs, especially young and aspiring chiefs enterprising travellers,
entrepreneurs, adapters and innovators when European material wealth came on to the
scene. It also made them highly sensitive to insult , slight or diminution of status.38
Just as Metge described that tikanga arises out of an on-going community debate so too
did authority arise out of continuing community conversation. Community support was
necessary in order to exercise the authority. Durie makes the point that authority for all
matters may not rest in one chief. Thus some leaders may lead in times of peace but not
in war. Authority was sometimes divided in other ways such as a chief may have mana
over the people but the mana over land and resources might be vested in another.39
How was Custom law enforced?
The distinction between civil and criminal law in Maori customary law is not helpful,
because all disputes are dealt with by the parties themselves and a greater or lesser circle
of kin. On the other hand disputes between hapu, especially those leading to full-scale
battles, had something of the character of war between separate states.
38Alan Ward,A Show of Justice, (1995).
39Eddie Durie, Custom Law, (1994). 38-40.
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Some disputes were dealt with by the parties directly concerned , but more serious
wrongs for example murder involved the whole community and involved retribution from
community leaders. How the wrong was dealt with depended not only what the wrong
was but on its degree, reputation and who the victim was.
If a wrongdoer made a victim of a chief the denouncement might come earlier than if he had
confined his attentions to people of low rank. The goal of a dispute settlement also varied with the
degree of the offence. The dominant purposes in the case of petty or first time offences were
usually to remove the causes of tension, to reconcile the parties and restore normal social
relationships. A just appropriation of responsibility was usually followed appropriate transfer of
goods to the injured party as utu or satisfaction.40
If an offence was more serious or its victims was of high rank or the offender was
flagrantly or persistently anti-social the concept of retribution could be very swift and
severe. Muru could be used to formally plunder the offender and their kin. This was
usually a formalised process where the leaders of both parties would discuss the matter in
great detail. The whakawa accusation, investigation and decision or judgement- were
quite often formal and structured. Tikanga might be cited, but the complexities of
inter/intra whanau /hapu relationships were take into account. This type of litigation had a
high sense of equity, but it was equity according to the mores of the society at the time.41
It is a mistake to equate the equity of pre-contact Maori with that of the neo-liberal
situated in the late1990s, and will only result in conflict of values. 42
40Alan Ward,A Show of Justice, (1995). 8.
41Alan Ward,A Show of Justice, (1995). 8-9
Ward uses the example of a chiefs wife being seduced by a slave it might be appropriate for the chief to
kill the slave, but if the chief had abused his wife which had caused her to stray , then the wifes kin might
muru the chief.42
It is more useful to recognise that pre-contact Maori was situated, and any application of Maoricustomary law today would be adapted to the context of the present society. While the underlying
principles may remain the same the application and punishment will (as has always been the case) will be
adapted for the circumstances.
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If the offender was clearly guilty then the their kin may readily offer compensation, but if
the claim was contested or seen as excessive then this would be resisted or might result in
a counter claim.43
Like all forms of mediation muru could only be effective if both parties
were willing to avoid conflict. Although marriage or descent ties between contesting
parties may have limited excesses, if there was serious conflict of interests, or where
there was an extreme imbalance between the parties, might may prevail. This could result
in the defeated party in nursing their resentment, trying to build strength and await a
chance to secure utu.
44
Metge characterises utu as the driving force of pre-contact Maori, utu drove more than
just warfare, where injury, death and damage attracted comparable evils (kinonga) in
return, but also included gift exchange. In which the giving of goods (foodstuffs, raw
materials, and artefacts), services and spouses attracted comparable gifts (taonga) in
return.45
Tohunga also played a significant role in the enforcement of law through the setting up of
rahui and exacting of punishment on those who breached the restriction s of rahui in the
form of makutu. Tohunga who mastered the art of makutu where supposed to exercise it
only on behalf of the community. No doubt some tohunga used their power to coerce
43Alan Ward,A Show of Justice, (1995). 9.
44Alan Ward,A Show of Justice, (1995). 9.
45Joan Metge,New Growth from Old, (1995). 100. See also further sections, especially Paul Merediths on
Concepts and Rachel Parrs on Trade and Exchange.
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people into doing their bidding or to curse personal enemies, however such misuse was
inhibited by the belief that failed sorcery turned back on its originator. 46
46Joan Metge, Commentary on Judge Durie's Custom Law, (1995) . part 2, 6.
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